How many Languages do you speak/fluent in? (or the language you want to learn)

Lol, I was inspired to create this thread after listening to a lot of Spanish songs/music! List up the languages you're fluent in or would love to learn (if you speak more than one of course). List the fluency level too! This is going to be fun. Ok, I'm first.

Aristoshark saidEnglish, like duhFrench - used to be fluent, now sadly a bit rustyGerman - can stumble through itCzech - studied but have forgotten it allRussian - studied but forgotten it allClassical Greek - don't remember much of it at all.

English: native Cantonese: fluent, first but now non-dominant French: advanced, 7 years~ (msg me if you'd be willing to practice with me!)Spanish: just before college upper division classesMandarin: a bit, forgot a lot since I stopped as a child

English is my first language.French is my second language. I started learning when I was 12 but I completed by university studies in French, and I currently work as a French translator. My Mandarin is quite good; I majored in it in university then moved to China and did intensive Chinese for 2 years before moving back to the States. I also translate Mandarin.I know enough Spanish to be able to read it pretty well, and to get the gist of a conversation, but I would never say that I speak it.

I know phrases/tidbits in Danish, Dutch, German, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, and Portuguese. I am a language NERD and I would collect phrases and language-learning books when I was younger. Now it's difficult enough to maintain my French and Mandarin that I pretty much devote most of my time to that.

English-native speakerSpanish-fluent, can speak, read, write easily but non native technically. learned all throughout high schoolTagalog-semifluent. Can speak a little and understand somewhat but that's about it. Even though my parents are from the Philippines they didn't raise me fully in the language. I would reply back in English most of the time.Mandarin- trying to learn on my own. Only in beginning stages but have a good grasp on tones and vocabulary.

Surprisingly I was able to comprehend Spanish pretty quickly (grammar, conjugations, vocabulary, speaking skills, etc.) more so than Tagalog. Has anyone ever experienced this? where you're able to learn other languages much more easily than the one your family speaks? I was able to learn Spanish fluently in 4 years yet I still struggle with even the basics of Tagalog even though I hear it everyday.

Fluent in English and Spanish. I guess I can understand some Portuguese and Italian due to their similarity to Spanish. I'd love to learn how to speak Japanese, Mandarin, Portuguese, Italian, and French.

French as a native languageEnglish as my daily language, started at primary schoolSpanish, intermediate, with high school and a job in MexicoJapanese, intermediate, with uni in France and 1 year in Waseda, Tokyo.Chinese, communicational level, with uni and 9 months in Qingdao University. Tok Pisin, basic, should learn more of that one, for work.